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	<title>Cat’s Eye Pub &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Cat’s Eye Pub &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<item>
		<title>25 Best Bars: Old Gems</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/25-best-bars-old-gems/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 2013 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[An Poitin Stil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[beer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Best Bars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cat’s Eye Pub]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Curb Shoppe Bar & Grill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Duda’s Tavern]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frazier’s on the Avenue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Howard’s Subway]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jennings Cafe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Johnny Dee’s Lounge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leon’s]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muir’s Tavern]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Brewer's Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Club Charles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Judge’s Bench Pub]]></category>
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			<h4>An Poitin Stil</h4>
<p><strong>Timonium</strong><br />By 7:15 p.m., An<br />
Poitin Stil’s parking lot is filled. Inside, happy hour is bleeding into<br />
 a bender. Four small groups of officemates are spread throughout The<br />
Stil, that rarest of breed, a county establishment that feels more bar<br />
than restaurant. Not that it lacks tasty fare. The Stil offers Irish<br />
classics like fish and chips and stew. Behind the eight-sided main bar,<br />
conversation varies from shop talk to gossip as the Harps flow. Outside<br />
on the heated “paddy ’o,” more white collars lean on the semi-circular<br />
bar, sipping suds while a duo plays familiar classic rock tunes. It’s 9<br />
p.m. now, and comments like, “You want a Jäger bomb?” and “What’s your<br />
favorite kind of underwear?” are overheard. Tomorrow should be an<br />
interesting workday, assuming everyone makes it into the office. 2323<br />
York Road, 410-560-7900, <a href="http://thestill.net">thestill.net</a></p>
<h4>The Brewer’s Art</h4>
<p><strong>Mt. Vernon</strong><br />Walk<br />
 up to The Brewer’s Art, and you’re faced with a decision. Head through<br />
the double doors into the foyer of the grand row house-turned-restaurant<br />
 or descend the stairs to the dim and grimy wine cellar-turned-bar.<br />
You’ll be happy either way—the upstairs exudes elegance, with dark wood<br />
molding and marble fireplaces. When you feel like late-night drinks,<br />
downstairs is the perfect hangout with its cozy corner tables carved<br />
with initials. But what we have to mention is the beer. Six tap handles,<br />
 some handmade by brewers, signal what’s on draft for the night: a<br />
roughly hewn cross for their famous abbey brown ale Resurrection, a hand<br />
 throwing up metal horns for their devilish, Belgian-style Ozzy (a<br />
signed, black-and-white image of the star himself sits behind the bar),<br />
and so on. All suds are brewed on-site, but if beer’s not your thing<br />
(we’ll let it slide), extensive wine and whiskey lists are sure to<br />
quench your thirst. 1106 N. Charles Street, 410-547-9310, <a href="http://thebrewersart.com">thebrewersart.com</a></p>
<h4>Cat’s Eye Pub</h4>
<p><strong>Fells Point</strong><br />Venture<br />
 into Cat’s Eye Pub, and you’ll be welcomed with open arms—or at least a<br />
 handshake across the bar from co-owner Tony Cushing Jr. A family-owned<br />
Baltimore staple for more than 35 years, the bar has a steady group of<br />
regulars and tourists on pilgrimage. (It made All About Beer’s list of<br />
125 places to have a beer before you die.) The dive’s eclectic décor has<br />
 influences Irish, maritime, and downright random. (An upside-down<br />
Christmas tree hangs from the ceiling.) Talented bands and a<br />
come-as-you-are vibe distinguish this pub from its neighbors. There’s<br />
live music every night (one particularly awesome blues band improvised<br />
lyrics about an O’s game) and the front bar is crowded with dancers.<br />
Move to the back room or patio for laid-back conversation with a crowd<br />
diverse in age and style. You’ll find no pretense here, just genuine<br />
people looking to have a good time. 1730 Thames Street, 410-276-9866, <a href="http://catseyepub.com">catseyepub.com</a></p>
<h4>The Club Charles</h4>
<p><strong>Station North</strong><br />Whatever<br />
 you might have heard about The Club Charles, it’s probably true. Yes,<br />
it can be cliquish and dripping with hipster attitude—what do you want?<br />
Matt Porterfield hangs out here!—but it also has low drink prices and<br />
very competent bartenders. The music alone could keep you there for<br />
hours, crafting your own playlist that includes the Cocteau Twins, James<br />
 Brown, The Velvet Underground, and The Jesus Lizard. The place is<br />
really, really red, but that only adds to the den-of-iniquity vibe. It’s<br />
 got two bars and several retro-looking booths and cubbies. The kitchen<br />
next door pumps out tasty burgers and pizza, and if you’re drinking on a<br />
 budget, it’s hard to beat $2.75 for a PBR and $4.30 for a pint of<br />
Guinness. Sure, The Club Charles is not the easiest place to make new<br />
friends, but that shouldn’t matter since you’ll probably run into<br />
someone you know. 1724 N. Charles Street, 410-727-8815, <a href="http://theclubcharles.com">theclubcharles.com </a></p>
<h4>Curb Shoppe Bar &#038; Grill</h4>
<p><strong>Mt. Washington</strong><br />Everything’s<br />
 in such tight proximity at the Curb Shoppe that the cops on one side of<br />
 the bar can almost certainly hear the conversation about drugs that two<br />
 men and a woman are having on the other. (It doesn’t help that these<br />
three appear to have been on their stools for quite some time, and as<br />
such, they’re pretty much shouting.) Neither group cares. It’s comfort<br />
not conflict that has kept the Curb Shoppe around all these years. It<br />
serves sandwiches on white, wheat, or rye—a practice, like the place<br />
itself, that’s seems timeless. If you’re not craving a plate of the Curb<br />
 Shoppe’s classic burger bites or gravy fries—not likely—help yourself<br />
to a basket of pretzels on the bar. The beer is cold, the drinks are<br />
strong, and maybe the only proof that it’s 2012 and not 1982 is the<br />
constant parade of people walking outside to smoke. 5736 Falls Road,<br />
410-433-8299, <a href="http://curbshoppe.com">curbshoppe.com</a></p>
<h4>Duda’s Tavern</h4>
<p><strong>Fells Point</strong><br />Duda’s<br />
 has come a long way from its mid-century origins as a shot-and-beer<br />
bar, a gathering place—and occasional boarding house—for ship captains<br />
and seafaring men. Now operated by the third generation of the Duda<br />
family, the attractively renovated tavern, at the corner of Bond and<br />
Thames, is a comfortable spot to enjoy a Resurrection draft, some<br />
complimentary peanuts, and a really delicious crab cake on a soft<br />
brioche roll. Weeknight and happy-hour specials provide more reasons to<br />
visit Duda’s and enjoy the ’80s music, pleasing draft selection, and<br />
sports shown on three TVs. In warm weather, the crowd spills onto the<br />
sidewalk, where a handful of tables offer a cafe feel. 1600 Thames<br />
Street, 410-276-9719, <a href="http://dudastavern.com">dudastavern.com</a></p>
<h4>Frazier’s on the Avenue</h4>
<p><strong>Hampden</strong><br />After<br />
 pouring a glass of red wine, filled to the brim, our bartender asks us<br />
not for cash or a credit card, but for our names. We’re at the smaller<br />
of Frazier’s two bars (the one in the room with a single pool table)<br />
and, even though we’re the only people here he doesn’t know, he treats<br />
us like we’re regulars. We will be soon. The sum of its nuances makes<br />
Frazier’s special—the flavorful salsa served with the potato skins, the<br />
wide wooden bar with a step on which to rest your feet and a ledge for<br />
your elbows, and the welcoming people on both sides of it. After<br />
splitting two salmon cakes and a delicious plate of fries, we order a<br />
nightcap. Our driver asks if she can get a half glass of wine. “Sure,”<br />
the bartender says. You get the feeling that he rarely says “no.” He<br />
starts pouring, looks up smiling, and says, “Just say when.” 919 W. 36th<br />
 Street, 410-662-4914</p>
<h4>Howard’s Subway</h4>
<p><strong>Linthicum</strong><br />In<br />
 July of 1946, Oscar Howard Sensibaugh and his wife, Ruby, bought a<br />
house on Hammonds Ferry Road and opened a bar in the basement. The<br />
underground location begat its enigmatic name: Subway. Four generations<br />
of Sensibaughs have worked the bar since, and honor Howard’s creation.<br />
It is a monument to what a basement bar should look like—a precise<br />
mixture of Formica, wood paneling, tile and terrazzo floors, red-leather<br />
 stools, and amber wall sconces. Judy the bartender scolds a customer<br />
for using profanity, and he sheepishly apologizes. At a corner booth,<br />
five young men share a pitcher of beer. The double doors to the kitchen<br />
swing open and Karen Sensibaugh carries a tray of loudly sizzling New<br />
York strip steaks. As she runs to the table, smoke trails behind her,<br />
and when she sets the metal platters down, the men applaud and cheer. As<br />
 they eat, a mouthwatering aroma fills the room, and several patrons ask<br />
 to see menus. 711 N. Hammonds Ferry Road, 410-789-6609</p>
<h4>Jennings Cafe</h4>
<p><strong>Catonsville</strong><br />Jennings<br />
 Cafe feels a lot like your uncle’s knotty-pine clubroom, and even the<br />
regulars will welcome you like a long-lost cousin.<br />
Family-owned-and-operated since 1958, Jennings is a comfortable spot to<br />
have a few beers and watch the game with the guys, but it’s wholesome<br />
enough to bring the kids for dinner, even complete with a children’s<br />
menu that includes spaghetti, hot dogs, and chicken tenders—plus, plenty<br />
 of choices for grownups. Try the popular crab cakes, soft crabs, and<br />
shrimp salad with a side of cucumber and onions, lovingly prepared by<br />
the matriarch herself, Mrs. Jennings. With a subtle horse-racing theme<br />
referencing its roots, and waitresses who just might pull up a chair and<br />
 shoot the breeze while you eat, Jennings has a comfortably dated feel.<br />
The only modern element might be the clever addition of Fat Tire ale to<br />
the tap array. 808 Frederick Road, 410-744-3824, <a href="http://jenningscafe.com">jenningscafe.com</a></p>
<h4>Johnny Dee’s Lounge</h4>
<p><strong>Parkville</strong><br />Tucked<br />
 in the lower level of the Loch Ridge Shopping Center, Johnny Dee’s<br />
Lounge is literally a hideaway. Walk through the unassuming doors and be<br />
 transported to another time. This isn’t your grandfather’s lounge,<br />
unless your grandfather was very hip. The main room is filled with<br />
enough vintage mid-century modern furniture to make the set designers of<br />
 Mad Men weep. If you don’t want to sit in the lounge, try to get a seat<br />
 at the bar. Its “L” shape, with nine black leather stools crowded<br />
around it, makes it ideal for chatting up strangers or drinking with a<br />
friend. If you want a beer, go ahead and order one of the 20 bottled<br />
brands in stock. But there’s something about the place that just makes<br />
you want a cocktail—a classic martini, Manhattan, or Tom Collins.<br />
Bartenders Joan, Tiffany, and Henry pour 30 years of combined experience<br />
 into every drink. Small plaques bearing the names of good customers<br />
line the walls—they can’t be purchased, they must be earned. And there’s<br />
 no better time to start. 1705 Amuskai Road, 410-665-7000</p>
<h4>The Judge’s Bench Pub</h4>
<p><strong>Ellicott City</strong><br />In<br />
 a city where our favorite bars are around the corner, driving 20<br />
minutes down the road seems unnecessary. That is, until we visit The<br />
Judge’s Bench Pub in Ellicott City. Located right on quaint Main Street,<br />
 the stone building bedazzled with white Christmas lights gives off an<br />
immediately warm feeling. We plop down on two open bar stools and notice<br />
 a diverse array of beer taps hanging from the ceiling and marvel at how<br />
 the bartender, Carrie, seems to know everyone’s back story. “How’s the<br />
new job?” she’ll ask. “Did you get a haircut?” Though we’re not<br />
regulars, she’s sweet as can be as we order a beer flight (four 4-ounce<br />
pours) including Ommegang Abbey, Heavy Seas Great Pumpkin, Stoudts<br />
Achluophobia, and a Weyerbacher Heresy stout. Without missing a beat,<br />
she assures us that the Stoudts isn’t too strong, and only clocks in at<br />
4.8 percent ABV. Rumors are this place is haunted (like most of Ellicott<br />
 City), but we can’t help but feel a sense of total comfort, and we’re<br />
not the only ones. “That’s what happens,” says a middle-aged man next to<br />
 us. “You come in here for one drink and, before you know it, they’re<br />
closing down.” 8385 Main Street, 410-465-3497, <a href="http://judgesbenchpub.com">judgesbenchpub.com</a></p>
<h4>Leon’s</h4>
<p><strong>Mt. Vernon</strong><br />No<br />
 one seems to remember the name of the first bar at the corner of Tyson<br />
Street and Park Avenue, or how long it had been there. But in 1957 it<br />
was called Leon’s, and Leon’s was the first “gay-friendly” bar in<br />
Baltimore. So, to Charm City’s gay community, it’s hallowed ground. On<br />
Sunday nights, the place is packed and fun. Patrons, all male, are<br />
spilling out the front door onto the sidewalk. Inside, Ben the bartender<br />
 works the oval bar, quickly serving two-for-one, happy-hour drinks.<br />
It’s a dark, low-ceilinged place, and techno music blares from the<br />
speakers without overwhelming the conversations. There is no uniform:<br />
Denim is as prevalent as leather; Orioles and Ravens jerseys are both<br />
represented; and men in Polo shirts sit next to men wearing no shirts at<br />
 all. Hugs and kisses get exchanged when walking in, even if you walked<br />
out just a minute before. Some patrons are obviously alone, but no one<br />
looks lonely. And maybe that’s all anyone should ask of any bar, gay or<br />
straight. 870 Park Avenue, 410-539-4993, <a href="http://leonsbaltimore.tripod.com">leonsbaltimore.tripod.com</a></p>
<h4>Muir’s Tavern</h4>
<p><strong>South Baltimore</strong><br />There<br />
 was a time when Fort Avenue was lined with family-owned bars—perhaps as<br />
 many as 30 between Race Street and Fort McHenry. South Baltimore’s<br />
locals bought drinks from their neighbors in places called Cox’s,<br />
Hartlove’s, and Henry’s. Today those names are nothing but memories,<br />
only Muir’s remains. It’s a Formstone castle at the corner of Marshall<br />
Street and Fort Avenue with a classic Baltimore pedigree. It was founded<br />
 in 1944 by Roland Muir, a tugboat captain, who ran the place and lived<br />
upstairs. His son, Roland Jr. took over in 1968, but not before he<br />
worked 23 years as a longshoreman and 18 years for the National Brewing<br />
Company. Inside, it’s pure Baltimore: There’s a framed portrait of<br />
Johnny Unitas on the wall, the Natty Boh signage dates back to when it<br />
was actually made here, and red neon light bathes everything. The bar<br />
fills up on a Friday afternoon and Roland Jr. sits at a back table with<br />
his nephew, Tom, the third-generation Muir at the helm. They clink two<br />
beer cans together and toast the approach of the seventh decade. 36 E.<br />
Fort Avenue, 410-385-0344</p>

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		<title>Get to know&#8230;Tony</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/get-to-know-tony/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 May 2009 11:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cat’s Eye Pub]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Q&A]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tony Cushing]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=65630</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[This is the first in an occasional series of Q&#038;A&#8217;s with local bar owners, tenders, musicians, bouncers and anyone else apart of Baltimore nightlife. Tony Cushing Jr. is the 25-year-old owner of Cat&#8217;s Eye Pub in Fells Point. In his 25 years, Cushing has seen a lot of hardship, with his father passing away from &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/get-to-know-tony/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>This is the first in an occasional series of Q&#038;A&#8217;s with local  bar owners, tenders, musicians, bouncers and anyone else apart of  Baltimore nightlife.</em></p>
<p>Tony Cushing Jr. is the 25-year-old owner of <a href="http://www.catseyepub.com/index.htm">Cat&#8217;s Eye Pub</a>  in Fells Point. In his 25 years, Cushing has seen a lot of hardship,  with his father passing away from a heart attack a year-and-a-half ago,  leaving him to run the bar. Tragically on Sunday, Cushing&#8217;s right-hand  man, and good friend of his father&#8217;s, Timmy Wright (or &#8220;Indian Timmy&#8221;)  also suffered a fatal heart attack.</p>
<p>But business must go on, and despite all of the loss in Cushing&#8217;s  life, he keeps Cat&#8217;s Eye going strong. Walking in on a weekend night,  there&#8217;s always a raucous band (of pretty much any genre) on stage, as  well as a crowd that&#8217;s all over the board as far as age, race, and  background. But there&#8217;s one thing they all have in common: They love  Cat&#8217;s Eye and keep coming back because it feels just like home. I sat  down with Cushing Tuesday afternoon and discussed how he runs such an  awesome place.</p>
<p><strong>Can you give me a little history of the Cat’s Eye Pub?</strong><br /> My father Anthony Cushing started the bar with Kenny Orey in 1975. Kenny  passed away 11 years after the bar started and my father passed away a  year-and-a-half ago, February 5. My mom, Ana Marie, is the treasurer;  she re-books all of the bands and does all the accounting. About  five-and-a-half years ago, my dad called me up and was getting a little  overwhelmed with the bar. He called me and didn’t ask me to do anything,  he was just telling me his situation. He never wanted to force me and I  made my own choice. I was at the University of South Florida for  business management. I had finished three-and-a-half years there and cut  it short to come down here. He gave me three months to help him out and  try to learn everything. I’ve been here ever since.</p>
<p><strong>It seems like you’ve made a lot of improvements, despite some terrible circumstances.</strong><br /> Yeah, the first thing that I did when I got here was I tore up the old  keg room (it was 25 years old), so I tripled the size of the room. I  refinished the bar, sanded it down, and replaced the rotten wood. We  went from 28 to 32 beers on draft, and have 41 total in the whole  building. I reinforced the floors. A week from now we’ll be repainting  all the windows outside. I just wanted to bring the bar back to its  heyday. </p>
<p><strong>Can you describe its heyday a little bit?</strong><br /> When the bar first opened, they couldn&#8217;t afford to order actual booze,  so they used to sell illegal hooch out of here and it came from a  distillery in Southern Pennsylvania called the Cat’s Eye. That’s where  we got the name from. One of our patrons drew up the logo and then it  all fell into place. We’ve always had a good relationship with the  sailors and, once we could afford it, the distributors too.</p>
<p><strong>What makes Cat’s Eye unique among the strip of bars on Thames Street?</strong><br /> We have live music 365 days of the year. The days that people aren’t  open, we have music, like Christmas and New Year’s Day. We have music  twice on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays in the afternoons and evenings.  We’re eclectic. We do blues, classic rock, funk, zydeco, jazz,  bluegrass, Irish, and rockabilly. </p>
<p><strong>You talked earlier about the things you’ve changed. What would you never change?</strong><br /> I’m never going to repaint the bathroom walls because of all the “drunk  knowledge” written on them. There are proverbs, like “the man from  Nantucket, with a [expletive] so big you could&hellip;” You can probably figure  out the rest. I would never change the flags on the ceiling. I would  never change the music. Steve Kraemer [and the Bluesicians] is my Sunday  afternoon band and has been playing here for 29 years. I’m never going  to be a Greene Turtle. And I’m never going to make chains, people keep  asking me that. I have enough work here, number one. Once you start  making chains it becomes unoriginal. I’d rather have one great place  than a bunch of okay places. </p>
<p><strong>Can you talk about your clientele?</strong><br /> Here’s an example of somebody not used to our clientele. This one guy  came in from New York and comes up to me and says, &#8220;Hey&#8221; and he has a  problem. He tells me that somebody tried to buy him a beer. So he was  like, &#8220;What is this guy, hitting on me or something?&#8221; And I said, &#8220;No  he’s trying to make you feel at home.&#8221; And it blew his mind. He just  couldn’t imagine that someone was trying to buy a drink for him to be  nice. I guess they don’t do that in New York. The reason that I love  Baltimore is because it’s filled with honest, genuine people.</p>
<p><strong>To you, what makes a perfect bar?</strong><br /> Staff. No one here is above anyone else. There are no managers, but we  all help out together. I have three employees here right now who aren’t  working, just here to help me out. We all chip in together and that way  there’s no hierarchy. We have Terry who’s been here for 27 years and she  is very in your face. Then we have Rob who’s my doorman and always  shakes everybody’s hand. One thing I always do is I introduce myself  when people start a tab. If you’re going to come here and spend your  money, I want you to feel at home.</p>
<p><strong>What do you think your dad would say about the bar today?</strong><br /> I think he would love the keg room, since the draft beer actually tastes  good now. I hope that he would be proud because I plan on being here as  long as he was. I figure this is still his bar and as long as this  place is here, he’ll live on.</p>

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